[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 5, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2002]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 5CFR317.503]

[Page 183-184]
 
                    TITLE 5--ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL
 
                CHAPTER I--OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
 
PART 317--EMPLOYMENT IN THE SENIOR EXECUTIVE SERVICE--Table of Contents
 
                     Subpart E--Career Appointments
 
Sec. 317.503  Probationary period.

    (a) An individual's initial appointment as an SES career appointee 
becomes final only after the individual has served a 1-year probationary 
period as a career appointee; there has been an assessment of the 
appointee's performance during the probationary period; and the 
appointing authority, or his or her designee, has certified that the 
appointee performed at the level of excellence expected of a senior 
executive during the probationary period.
    (b) When a career appointee's executive qualification have been 
certified by a Qualifications Review Board on the basis of special or 
unique qualities, as described in Sec. 317.502(c), the probationary 
assessment must address any executive development activities the agency 
identified in support of the request for QRB certification.

[[Page 184]]

    (c) The probationary period begins on the effective date of the 
personnel action initially appointing the individual to the SES as a 
career appointee and ends one calendar year later.
    (d) The following conditions apply to crediting service towards 
completion of the probationary period.
    (1) Time on leave with pay while in an SES position is credited. 
Earned leave for which the employee is compensated by lump-sum payment 
upon separation is not credited.
    (2) Time in a nonpay status while in an SES position is credited up 
to a total of 30 calendar days (or 22 workdays). After 30 calendar days, 
the probationary period is extended by adding to it time equal to that 
served in a nonpay status.
    (3) Time absent on military duty or due to compensable injury is 
credited upon restoration to the SES when no other break in SES service 
has occurred.
    (4) Time following transfer to an SES position in another agency is 
credited, i.e., the individual does not have to start a new probationary 
period.
    (e) Removal of a career appointee during the probationary period is 
covered by subpart D of part 359 of this chapter.
    (f) A career appointee who resigns or is removed from the SES before 
completion of the probationary period may not receive another SES career 
appointment unless selected under SES merit staffing procedures. The 
individual, however, need not be recertified by a QRB unless the 
individual was removed for performance or disciplinary reasons.
    (g) An individual who separated from the SES during the probationary 
period and who has been out of the SES more than 30 calendar days must 
serve a new 1-year probationary period upon reappointment and may not 
credit previous time in a probationary period. In the following 
situations, however, there is an exception and the individual is only 
required to complete the remainder of the previously served probationary 
period.
    (1) The individual left the SES without a break in service for a 
Presidential appointment and is exercising reinstatement rights under 5 
U.S.C. 3593(b).
    (2) The individual left the SES without a break in service for other 
civilian employment that provides a statutory or regulatory reemployment 
right to the SES when no other break in service occurred.
    (3) The break in SES service was the result of military duty or 
compensable injury, and the time credited under paragraph (c)(3) of this 
section was not sufficient to complete the probationary period.

[54 FR 9758, Mar. 8, 1989, as amended at 60 FR 6386, Feb. 2, 1995; 65 FR 
33740, May 25, 2000]